KI Media: “Speak Truth To Power (“Courage without Borders”) Series - Wangari Maathai (Kenya) “Women and the Environment”” plus 15 more

KI Media: “Speak Truth To Power (“Courage without Borders”) Series - Wangari Maathai (Kenya) “Women and the Environment”” plus 15 more


Speak Truth To Power (“Courage without Borders”) Series - Wangari Maathai (Kenya) “Women and the Environment”

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 12:44 AM PDT

Speak Truth To Power ("Courage without Borders") Series - Wangari Maathai (Kenya) "Women and the Environment"
http://www.scribd.com/full/51584942?access_key=key-tuyluu3k8kewl7hu1x1

Khmer Sculptures (in French) - Scupltures Khmères

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 12:26 AM PDT

KI-Media would like to thank Lok Bora Touch, Esq. for sharing this document.

Khmer Sculptures (in French) - Scupltures Khmères
http://www.scribd.com/full/51584571?access_key=key-1wl5fqbfojzff8gmy5y

Politiktoons No. 156: Mr. NATO

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 12:20 AM PDT

Cartoon by Sacrava (on the web at http://politiktoons.blogspot.com

Boeung Kak Srak Teuk Phnek Khmer - "Khmer Tears over Boeung Kak": Poem in Khmer by B. Boy

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 12:02 AM PDT

‘Sometimes we have to speak out, we cannot remain silent’: Peschoux

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 11:59 PM PDT

Christophe Peschoux, country head of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, is pictured at his office in Phnom Penh yesterday. (Photo by: Heng Chivoan)
Friday, 25 March 2011
Thomas Miller
The Phnom Penh Post

After a long career in Cambodia, including four years as head of the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Christophe Peschoux said this week he will step down at the end of April to take a senior position with the office in Geneva.

Although Peschoux said in an interview yesterday with The Post that he brought cooperation between his office and the government to "unprecedented levels", senior officials called for his ouster last year.

Prime Minister Hun Sen made the appeal during a meeting in October with visiting UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, following a request to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay in August and a public warning from Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong in July.


Nevertheless, Peschoux yesterday defended the work of his office, including its public statements on pressing human rights concerns, and gave insight into his layered relationship with the government.
"Human rights work is not a cocktail party, it's a struggle," he said.

Peschoux, who also spent seven years investigating human rights abuses for OHCHR in the 1990s, will be replaced on an interim basis by his deputy, James Heenan, on May 2.
This is an edited transcript by Thomas Miller.

Why are you leaving your position at the end of next month?
I have been offered a new position in OHCHR in Geneva. This is not a sudden decision.... I began to apply for positions in April last year, for family reasons because my children are going to enter university next year and I want to be in Europe at that time.

In the meanwhile, [there is also] the tension with the Government as a reason over the statements that we issued in July.

One was my comment to The Cambodia Daily, in response to their request, regarding the illegal extradition of the two Thai Red Shirts [activists wanted by Thailand for suspected involvement in a bombing].

That created a lot of irritation in the Foreign Ministry. You remember the public letter from the foreign minister against me warning me that my position would be reconsidered if I did it again.

A week later there was another statement, issued this time by the spokesperson of the high commissioner in Geneva, in relation to the human rights implication of the [opposition Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker] Mu Sochua defamation case [brought by Prime Minister Hun Sen].

That was quite a fairly straightforward statement, but I think the combination of these statements have provoked the anger of the government, probably of the Prime Minister, and as a result they have requested my removal to the [UN] high commissioner [for human rights Pillay]. That was in August, and the high commissioner declined on the ground that there was not sufficiently good reasons for that, and expressed complete confidence and support in me.

The matter rose again when the secretary general met the Prime Minister here and the Prime Minister brought the matter up during the meeting and requested the secretary general to remove me, and the secretary general stood by the high commissioner position.

As a result I have been internally [persona non grata] in the sense that there was a note sent [by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs] to all government officials in the ministries to cease to recognise me and cease cooperation with me. And that was in November. Since then all government officials have been reluctant to meet me.

Cooperation with the office has more or less continued. In some ways it has been affected, but we have been able to reestablish in most cases normal cooperation. But the instruction was clear: You don't meet Peschoux.

And they have not met me, which, as you can understand, has made my life quite difficult because I have premised the approach and the work of this office on dialogue and cooperation.

Then there is this political logic ... that it was time for me to move. So these factors accelerated the decision process but [have] not affected it significantly. In the course of the year I would have left irrespective of whether there were tensions with the government.

You came in as head of the office here in 2007. How did you build up trust with the Government?
I have worked many years in this country and in this region, and I have learned a number of things. Face is important here – public face. And public controversy, public confrontation, is counterproductive.

The second lesson is that we do not have, as a human rights institution, the means of protection. So the question is how can you contribute to improve the situation of human rights?
And the response to that question is that you have to engage with the powers that be.

[Another] lesson is that in Cambodia as in other countries of the region ... a lot of things can be said if they are said between four eyes. In other words, confidential discussion of issues of concern is much better accepted if it is done with a care not to make your interlocutor lose face.

So having learned these lessons when I arrived here, I explained to my interlocutors in the Government that I wouldn't dialogue with them through the media.

But I've told them at the same time, we will have confidential dialogue, but the condition is that your door has to be open and that you are willing to listen to what we are saying, because when we will be bringing issues of concern to you, they will be well-documented; they will be well thought-out; we will have conducted a legal analysis; and we will come up with ideas for a solution.

These were the main elements of my approach, and we have built relationships with various institutions in the Government on these premises. And I think so far it has worked well. It has not worked everywhere. But frankly after four years of testing this approach in this country, I can't see any other way to further our protection objectives and to have an impact, because what we are after is to have an impact.

Against this background, I have not completely abandoned public advocacy. But we have used public advocacy only when we feel that there is either no dialogue going on with the Government, because there is no willingness to address these issues, or there is an emergency situation and we have no time to engage in dialogue.

What do you think are the biggest successes of your approach?
I always quote our prison programme, because this is a programme that we have jointly developed with the Ministry of Interior. This is a programme where there is a willingness to reform the institution but there is a lack of know-how.

We had visited several prisons, and a recurring theme coming out from prisoners, but also from staff and the directors of the prisons, was that prisoners were hungry, they didn't eat their full.

So we wrote that up with the Ministry of Interior and persuaded them that there was a need to increase the food allocation that they received. The ministry accepted [the proposal] to develop the daily food allocation from 1500 to 2800 [riel].

A second example was the question of ill treatment in prison and abuse by detainees on other detainees. The prison authorities had delegated some of the disciplinary authority to prisoners, to groups of prisoners that were organised in the prison, which they called prisoner management cells. This goes against basic international standards on the management of prisons because it creates a state within the state, and then a lot of abuse happened which you can't control.

We have highlighted the problem, they have understood it, and they have reformed that system.... and the number of abuse [cases] has decreased. Not disappeared – prisons are prisons – but there has been a significant improvement.

You emphasise confidential dialogue, but is there something lost, in terms of accountability, if the public is not aware of Government commitments?
Yes, of course this is a risk. But this is part of this 'gentleman agreement'. Confidentiality, we regard it as a tool for dialogue, not as a shield for inaction. So that's the basic premise. So as long as confidential dialogue leads to action – to corrective action and to progress – we engage.

But if we experience that confidentiality is being abused for doing nothing, then we have to reassess our engagement and decide whether we are going to speak publicly on this issue or withdraw our cooperation.

The Government named you specifically – and not the OHCHR office – as the problem. Why do you think they singled you out?
Let's go first to the three main allegations that have been levelled against me to justify the fact that I've been shunned.

The first one is that I don't cooperate with the Government. Everything I've done in the past four years shows the contrary. I have brought the level of cooperation of this office with the Government to unprecedented levels.

Second is that I am the spokesperson for the opposition. Everybody who is familiar with my work knows that it is totally independent. I am not in bed with the Government. I am not in bed with civil society. I am not in bed with the donor community. We are totally independent.... And this may not be appreciated. But ... we are a UN institution with a human rights mandate. And I am very clear about what my role is in this country. And my role is to talk to everybody.

But we have reached a situation in this country whereby any public criticism expressed vis a vis policies or practices are immediately tarred with the opposition brush.

The third factor is that I overstepped my mandate. Again, the high commissioner has been very clear, the secretary general has been very clear: We have a public advocacy mandate, as UN and as OHCHR. I have been exercising this public advocacy mandate with a lot of tact, I think, in a very courteous manner and as diplomatically as I could.

But sometimes we have to speak out, we have to say things, we can't remain silent. That's part of being a human rights and a UN voice in a country where we are dealing with difficult issues. There are issues [over which] we can't simply remain silent because silence becomes a complicity.

In my own personal and also professional view as a human rights activist and official in the UN, that's the bottom line. We have a moral authority and sometimes we have to exercise this moral authority.

Is there [a personal] element related to my work in the past ... when I was here from 1993-99. It's possible. I was in charge of the investigation unit of this office. I have investigated hundreds of various human rights violations – killings, extrajudicial executions, disappearances, torture, rape and so on and so forth. I have been a very scrupulous investigator, and not all of the cases that I have documented during this period have been dismissed, because the investigation was properly done and all the facts were well-established.

So am I a reminder of some of the crimes, some of the human rights violations of this period? Possibly.

Why do you think the Government is particularly sensitive to public criticism from the UN? Do you think it dates to the 1980s, when the UN seat was filled by the Khmer Rouge-led coalition?
There is a UN dimension. The UN was involved in the war against Cambodia from 1979-91 and the signing of the Paris Agreements in the sense that the UN was used by the powers exercising their authority through it to pursue the Cold War.

This has had a very detrimental affect on Cambodia and on its population because Cambodia was coming out of the Khmer Rouge period completely ... shattered, people's lives were shattered, there was no one, there was no resource, and the current party here in power was reconstructed by the Vietnamese and tried to put this country together.

Not only were they not provided international assistance from the West but they were besieged by the West and by China at the time during this period of Cold War. So they were trying to rebuild society in the face of an aggression, in the face of war, and that has left deep scars, I think, in the psyche, in the memory of many in the current leadership.

I think perhaps it would be a good idea for the UN one day to do what the UN did in Rwanda and to humbly apologize to the Cambodian people for the way that it had been used. I think it would be useful. That may help turn the page of this sad chapter of the UN history in this country. I think it would be a human thing to do.

Russian Aeroflot To Have Direct Flight To Cambodia In 2011

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 11:52 PM PDT

PHNOM PENH, March 25 (Bernama) -- With a growing demand from Russian tourists visiting Cambodia, Russian airlines Aeroflot will have direct flight to Cambodia sometime this year, China's Xinhua news agency quoted a government official on Friday. Tith Chantha, director general of Ministry of Tourism said that Cambodian government had discussed with Russian government and Airline Aeroflot on promoting tourism sector including the direct flight between Moscow and Phnom Penh. He said he had joined a Cambodian delegation to Russia last week, led by Thong Khon, minister of tourism during which a memorandum of understanding on tourism was inked and discussion on having direct flight between Moscow and Phnom Penh was exchanged.

Tith Chantha said Russian people are potential to many tourists ' destinations around the world these days and millions of them travel abroad for tourist purpose.

To Egypt alone, he said, Russian tourists accounted at 2.5 million last year.


According to statistic of ministry of tourism, there were 34, 170 Russian tourists visited Cambodia in 2010, an increase of 76 percent compared with 2009 which recorded at 19,395.

Tith Chantha said Cambodia hopes to see about 100,000 Russian tourists visiting Cambodia by the year end and the estimate number will be higher once the Aeroflot is on service.

He added that Aeroflot is now in deep discussion with Cambodia' s Civil Aviation Authority on the matter.

Cambodia's rich in beautiful beaches, cultural sites like Angkor Wat temple along with attainment of full security, peace and stability of the country--is now attracting millions of foreign tourists every year.

Aeroflot used to have direct flights between the nations' capitals in 1980s and early 1990 with twice flights per week.

Thai PM positive over two boundary meetings

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 11:03 PM PDT

March 25, 2011
Xinhua

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Friday voiced his confidence that the Thai-Cambodian General Border Committee (GBC) and the Joint Boundary Commission (JBC) meetings could still be arranged.

Prime Minister Abhisit stated that the GBC meeting would still be held although Army Chief General Prayut Chan-ocha earlier expressed his concern if the meeting would be organized in Indonesia, not in Phnom Penh, Cambodia as initially scheduled.

The army chief stated recently that he did not wish Indonesia or any third country to meddle in the bilateral mechanism of either GBC or JBC meeting.

Indonesia, the current chairman of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), earlier proposed to hold JBC and military- led GBC on April 7 and 8.


As for the Thai-Cambodian JBC meeting, the prime minister elaborated that both sides were ready to go on with the talks, which would be made in a bilateral manner while a resolution on whether to allow an observer's participation would be reached very soon.

The prime minister believed that Indonesia would understand that it had to wait until both sides reach a mutual agreement prior to sending observers to the meeting.

Thailand and Cambodia earlier agreed to allow Indonesian observers to monitor a ceasefire in a deadly border dispute between the two countries in February this year.

ASEAN foreign ministers said in a statement in Jakarta that they welcomed a commitment made by Thailand and Cambodia to avoid further armed clashes and urged both sides to resume bilateral negotiations as soon as possible.

Boeung Kak residents protest in Phnom Penh on 25 March 2011

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 11:01 PM PDT

Residents of the Boeung Kak lakeside cry during a protest against evacuation of some 2000 families in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 25 March 2011. (Source: EPA/BGNES)

Yellow Shirts not move to pressure Parliament to reject key Thai-Cambodian documents

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 10:57 PM PDT

BANGKOK, March 25 (MCOT online news) -- The anti-government 'Yellow Shirt' People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) on Friday said it would not rally at Parliament to pressure the joint sitting of the House of Representatives and the Senate to consider approving the minutes of three Thai-Cambodian Joint Boundary Commission (JBC) meetings, claiming that their campaign has yielded fruitful results.

PAD spokesman Panthep Puapongphan said the movement would hold fast at its rally site at Makkhawan Bridge on Rajdamnoen Avenue, but have no plan to move to step up pressure on parliamentarians to reject the documents.

He said the joint sitting had been scheduled to convene at 9m today but their lack of a quorum forced the session to adjourn until afternoon.


Mr Panthep said the PAD had earlier submitted a letter to parliamentarians to express their opposition to the approval of the JBC documents and some MPs who disagreed with the documents opted not to attend the meeting.

Meanwhile, he said, the MPs from opposition parties affirmed that even though they attend the meeting but they would not vote to approve the minutes.

Mr Panthep said this showed that the attempt of PAD to oppose the JBC documents was relatively successful so that no need for the movement to stage rally at Parliament.

He said the PAD would closely monitor the joint sitting whether the three documents could be approved at the meeting and if the minutes have passed, further action would be taken against the border agency documents.

Meanwhile, Thai Patriots Network activist Chaiwat Sinsuwong who led protest not far from PAD demonstrators said the network would not also stage rally at parliament but would wait for the result of the session.

If the JBC documents were approved, he said, the network would petition the Supreme Court, accusing the lawmakers of breaching the Constitution to cause the loss of Thai territory.

In a related development, the families of Veera Somkwamkid, coordinator of the Thai Patriots Network, and Ratree Pipatanapaiboon, his personal secretary--both jailed in Cambodia for spying--submitted a letter to Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to secure the release of the pair within seven days.

Democrat MP Panich Vikitsreth on Friday led Mr Somkid's brother and Ms Ratree's niece to brief the press at Parliament, saying that relatives of the two Thai detainees handed the letter to the prime minister through him to urge the Thai government to help them within seven days.

However, Mr Panich said the prime minister did not ignore them and he himself also worked with Thai embassy in Phnom Penh to seek permission for their families to visit the detainees.

Preecha Somkwamkid, Mr Veera's younger brother, said his brother's health has gradually improved after being treated in prison by a doctor. He confirmed that he did not want the issue of Mr Veera to have any impact on the relations of the two neighbouring countries or to be linked to a political conflict.

Mr Chaiwat said the network legal team was contacted by Thai embassy in Phnom Penh to be allowed to meet Mr Veera and Ms Ratree. The legal team will obtain more information on Mr Veera's illness and seeking an appeal or a royal pardon after visiting the two detainees in Phnom Penh, he said.

Action at grass roots

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 10:53 PM PDT

Sewing the seeds ... the Hotel de la Paix Sewing Centre teaches skills. (Photo: Leisa Tyler)

Angkor's tourist income is funding community projects beyond the Cambodian heritage site, writes Leisa Tyler.

March 26, 2011
The Age (Australia)

Cambodia's Angkor Heritage Park is the fastest-growing tourism attraction of any World Heritage monument. Increasing at an average rate of 30 per cent a year, arrivals are expected to reach 3 million this year, up from 200,000 visitors 10 years ago.

Tourism has turned the temples into one of the most sought-after experiences in the world and brought development and infrastructure to the nearby town of Siem Reap.

But few people in Siem Reap province benefit from these tourist dollars. Predominantly rural, the people remain among the poorest in Cambodia, many living on less than a dollar a day.


A Bangkok-based hotel management group is hoping to change this. "Tourism is better equipped and in a better position to deal with poverty than many governments," says Bill Black, the managing director of Ativa Hospitality, a management company that has the Hotel de la Paix and Shinta Mani hotel in Siem Reap in its portfolio.

Black is a man on a mission. Diverting a percentage of room rates into community-based projects, the genteel Canadian wants to prove that, with a little effort and imagination, tourism can be a vehicle for community development.

Black's first project, the Shinta Mani Hospitality School (now called the Institute of Hospitality), started in 2004. It enrolled 20 disadvantaged youths in a year-long hospitality course conducted at the Shinta Mani hotel that would prepare them to work in the town's burgeoning hotel industry.

The program was a success and became the model for similar projects in Cambodia. Another Shinta Mani initiative is the Connect program, in which hotel guests can buy and deliver practical items such as wells and vegetable seed, piglets or bicycles to families in need.

Since its inception in 2005, the program has built 1043 water wells with mini-market gardens and 97 small concrete houses with septic tanks.

Black has since established the Hotel de la Paix Sewing Centre with funds from the five-star hotel, which teaches needlework and accounting skills to young women.

More recently the Hotel de la Paix teamed with MasterCard to raise money for a new workshop, which is now under construction at the sewing centre. A previous project with the credit-card company bought 900 bicycles for underprivileged school children.

"The idea is to give people the opportunity to be self-sufficient," Black says, explaining that first they give families a well and vegetable seed. When they see the family has successfully grown vegetables, including surplus to sell for income, then they may buy them a bicycle or a female piglet to raise and breed.

Fiona Donato and daughter Felicity, 10, from Dover in Tasmania, became involved with Black's Connect during a school trip to Cambodia, buying two water wells and a piglet and delivering them to the donors. Donato says the experience was "life changing", and the school has since donated two more piglets, a house and 500 mosquito nets through fund raising.

Murder-suicide in La Vergne, Tennessee, involving Cambodian-American couple

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 10:20 PM PDT

La Vergne Couple Die In Murder-Suicide

2 Kids In Room With Couple, Says Man's Mom

March 25, 2011
Reported By Larry Flowers
WSMV-TV Channel 4 News (Nashville, Tennessee, USA)

LA VERGNE, Tenn. -- Police said a murder-suicide claimed the lives of a couple in a La Vergne subdivision Friday morning.

The female victim, 27-year-old Nith Sim, who's originally from Cambodia and has been in the United States for seven years, was dead when officers arrived at a home on Betty Lou Lane in the Lake Forest neighborhood.

The man, identified as Daniel Sim, 28, was found shot at the home and taken to Stone Crest Medical Center. He was later transferred to Vanderbilt Medical Center, where he died Friday afternoon.

Daniel Sim's mother, who was visiting from New York, found the couple at about 10:30 a.m., police said. She first told police she heard nothing, then she said she did hear something but thought it was one of the kids. A 5-month-old boy and 2-year-old girl were in the bedroom with the couple.


"She heard the baby start crying and went to check on the baby," said La Vergne Police Chief Ted Boyd. "The door was locked. (She) went around to a window to try and get someone to open the door then forced entry into the room and discovered both adults had been shot."

Investigators said they believe Nith Sim shot her husband while he was asleep. Police said the gun then jammed, but she got another weapon to fatally shoot herself.

"We said there were two guns. We believe that gun may have jammed from the way it was used. She laid that gun down and picked up another gun and used that gun on herself," said Boyd.

Police described the bedroom as a bloody crime scene.

"(It's) just shocking to have something like that, just what the kids saw, what they (are) going to go through," said the Sims' next-door neighbor Leon Cade. "They are going to need some type of counseling, some kind of help. ... I'm glad they didn't kill the kids."

La Vergne police said they're also thankful the children were not hurt.

"As thin as walls are and the caliber of these guns, they penetrate walls every easily. It was dangerous for not only the kids but for the adult that was in the house, but being that close, it was nothing to protect those children but air, and luckily, they didn't get hit," Boyd said.

Department of Children's Services workers were called to the home. They visited with the grandmother, who will be caring for the children. Police said she will most likely take them back to New York.

Some neighbors said they have often heard the couple arguing.

The family had a roommate who worked with Daniel Sim. He arrived home and received the news of the couple's death from police.

Thailand never intended to ratify the JBC minutes?

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 10:11 PM PDT

Parliament postpones debate on JBC minutes

Five-hour meeting fails to reach conclusion

26/03/2011
Mongkol Bangprapa
Bangkok Post

Parliament has postponed its deliberation of the minutes from the Thai-Cambodian Joint Boundary Commission meetings until this coming Tuesday, after a five-hour debate yesterday failed to reach any conclusion.

The government has asked parliament to endorse three documents from previous JBC meetings between Thailand and Cambodia.

Section 190 of the constitution requires that any crucial binding international treaty must be endorsed by parliament.

The government asked parliament to back the minutes in order to pave the way for further demarcation talks between the two countries.

A joint sitting of the parliament deliberated the three minutes yesterday.


It could not convene in the morning as planned as it lacked a quorum.

Parliament reconvened in the afternoon. But after debating for five hours, with no conclusion reached, it decided to postpone the matter until Tuesday.

Before the meeting was adjourned, Rosana Tositrakul, a Bangkok senator, questioned why the government seemed to be in such a rush to seek endorsement of the minutes.

She suggested it leave the issue to the next government.

She also expressed her concern that parliament's endorsement of the three minutes might prompt Thailand to lose part of its territory to Cambodia.

"If our voting today leads to the loss of our territory in the future, how could we explain it to our children?

"The House is about to be dissolved and a general election called. Why don't we let the next government take care of this issue. "The government should withdraw this motion and allow more time for the study of it," said Ms Rosana.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva told parliament that endorsement of the three JBC minutes would not cause Thailand to lose any territory to Cambodia.

Mr Abhisit denied that the government had sought endorsement of the JBC minutes in any kind of hurry. He said they were drafted back in 2008 and 2009. The government did not seek endorsement of the minutes right after the meetings.

On suggestions that the matter be left for the next government, Mr Abhisit said Cambodia has tried to turn Thai-Cambodian bilateral disputes into international disputes, which was wrong.

Cambodia had also tried to gain an edge over Thailand at World Heritage Committee meetings about the Preah Vihear temple _ the disputed temple on the border between the two nations _ but its efforts had not succeeded.

The international community recognised bilateral mechanisms between the two countries for solving disputes _ memorandums of understanding, and the JBC, he said.

"If we did not do anything and allowed Cambodia to claim that Thailand has not sincerely tried to hold talks through bilateral mechanisms, could you guarantee that in the future international organisations would not intervene in disputes between Thailand and Cambodia?" Mr Abhisit said.

The yellow shirt People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) yesterday declined to move its rally to parliament to oppose parliament's deliberation of the minutes as it had previously threatened, claiming its campaign from the Makkhawan Bridge, where it gathers normally, has already yielded good results.

PAD spokesman Parnthep Pourpongpan said the movement had earlier submitted a letter to parliamentarians to express opposition to any approval of the JBC documents. Some MPs who disagreed with the documents opted not to attend parliament's meeting.

Bogus monks exploit Buddhism [in Thailand]

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 10:00 PM PDT

Almost 300 foreign monks live in tents at Wat Talom in Bangkok's Phasicharoen district where six Burmese monks, a Mon monk and a Cambodian novice were arrested on charges of illegal entry to the country last week. TAWATCHAI KEMGUMNERD
While many saffron-robed foreigners are genuinely interested in studying religion, some are entering Thailand illegally to beg for money from the public

26/03/2011
Supoj Wancharoen
Bangkok Post

The presence of more than 300 foreign Buddhists at a Bangkok temple has raised concerns that some might be bogus monks begging for money and preying on people.

Officers from the Immigration Bureau, Thammasala police station and the National Buddhism Bureau inspected Wat Talom in Phasicharoen district early on March 17 following complaints that hundreds of foreign monks had sought shelter at the temple.

The team found about 300 monks and novices from various countries such as Sri Lanka, India, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos and Burma living in tents on the temple grounds.


Many had entered the country legally, with some carrying tourist visas and some using foreign students' visas.

Eight, including six Burmese monks, one ethnic Mon monk and one Cambodian novice, failed to produce travel documents and ordination certificates.

The eight were defrocked and sent to the Immigration Bureau on illegal entry charges.

Pol Col Chartchai Iamsaeng, deputy commander of the Immigration Bureau's investigation centre, who led the inspection, said members of the public had complained that many monks, thought not to be Thai nationals, lived in the temple and some went out in the afternoon to collect alms, which was against Buddhist teaching.

Phra Maha Boontheung Chutinatharo, abbot of Wat Talom, said the foreign monks had entered the country legally to study dhamma and some wanted to visit Thailand.

Many monks from overseas wanted to study here as Thailand was known for its Buddhism studies. "Residents living near the temple might not be aware that many monks staying at the temple are foreign monks who entered the country to study Buddhist teachings," said the abbot.

"Those foreign monks do not have the same custom of completing their alms-collecting by 10am, the way we do."

Nopparat Benjawattananan , director of the National Buddhism Bureau (NBB), said 1,057 foreign monks sought permission from his office to live in the kingdom last year.

Most came from Cambodia with 279, followed by Bangladesh 264, Nepal 131, Burma 104, Laos 46, China 34, Malaysia 33, Vietnam 29, the United States, 23, and Indonesia 18. The rest were from other countries, he said.

Thailand's reputation as a haven for Buddhist studies had opened the way for gangs to enter the country under the guise of being foreign monks, said the NBB director.

A source said Singapore and Malaysia had also grappled with problems of bogus monks begging for money.

Mr Nopparat said the NBB could not control foreign monks who had not registered with his agency.

Bogus monks had entered the country using tourist visas.

The NBB did not know how many foreign monks had entered the country. Foreigners wanting to study at Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University or Mahamakut Buddhist University could directly seek permission from those two Buddhist universities.

Mr Nopparat said he would invite representatives from the two universities to discuss the registration of foreign monks with his agency to ensure better controls.

Kai (real name withheld), 40, who lives near Wat Talom, said most foreign monks had left the temple following news reports about their presence.

However, he believed some of the monks were still staying in the country, begging for money.

He said they would probably return to the temple after news about them faded away.

"The problem started about 10 years ago when the temple changed abbots," he said.

Boonchai Chuecharnwong, a businessman in Bang Bua Thong area, condemned those who wore saffron robes to exploit Buddhism.
-------------------------------------
Monastic police patrol city

Many people know the city administration is responsible for ensuring the safety of Bangkok residents. Its city inspectors or thetsakit officials are assigned to help police guard the city.

But only a few people know about the monastic police whose task is to protect Buddhism.

The National Buddhism Bureau formed a group of officials to monitor the wayward activities of Buddhist monks in Bangkok and surrounding provinces a long time ago.

The monastic police look for monks who fail to adhere to their vows or are involved in disciplinary or legal wrongdoing and report their misconduct to the bureau. The bureau will alert the police, who apprehend the monks, said Udom Songkhajorn, a bureau official.

There are about 15 monastic police officers in Bangkok. The officials are divided into four teams.

The duties of the monastic police are similar to those of thetsakit officials as they have no authority to make arrests. They only pass on information as whistleblowers.

Monks accused of breaching Buddhist teachings or involved in wrongdoing will be investigated by a panel of monks. If there is a basis to the accusation, the monks will be defrocked.

Mr Udom said cases against wayward monks in the provinces would be handled by provincial Buddhism offices.

UK Appoints Openly Gay Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:52 PM PDT

Mark Gooding, appointed this week British Ambassador to Cambodia. (Photo courtesy Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London)

LONDON, March 25, 2011 (UK Gay News) – Mark Gooding has been appointed Her Majesty's Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia, it was announced yesterday.

Currently Mr. Gooding is Deputy High Commissioner to Sri Lanka and the Maldives in Colombo and is due to take up his new appointment in September.

He is openly gay and has a civil partner, Dr Christopher McCormick.


"I am honoured and delighted to be appointed HM Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia," he said in a press statement.

"The UK and Cambodia have strong shared interests in a variety of fields, including trade, development, tourism, climate change, security, and human rights. I look forward to developing further the strong ties that already exist between our two countries and to creating new partnerships in the years ahead."

Generally speaking, Cambodia – a predominantly Buddhist country – accepts homosexuality.

The highly-regarded King Sihanouk famously said in 2004 that he supported gay marriage. But Cambodia is not an 'absolute monarchy' and the King has no executive powers.

And three years later Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen publicly announced at a graduation ceremony attended by almost 3,000 people, that his youngest, and adopted, daughter Malis was a lesbian – and that had disowned her. However, in the same speech he asked Cambodians to accept homosexuals.

A Gay Pride has been staged in the capital Phnom Penh every year since 2004, and is usually held to coincide with International Day Against Homophobia. This year, Phnom Penh Pride is between May 10 and 17.

Former Khmer Rouge prison chief seeks acquittal

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:48 PM PDT

Duch -- whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav

26 March 2011
AFP

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia's war crimes court will hear appeals next week in the case of of former Khmer Rouge cadre Duch, who is seeking acquittal despite admitting running a feared jail where thousands died.

Duch, 68, was sentenced to 35 years in prison last July for war crimes and crimes against humanity for overseeing the deaths of 15,000 people at the notorious torture prison Tuol Sleng in the late 1970s.

The jailer, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, was the first former Khmer Rouge cadre to face an international tribunal.

His sentence was reduced to 30 years on the grounds that he had been detained illegally for years. And given time already served, Duch could walk free in less than 19 years, much to the dismay of many victims of the brutal 1975-1979 regime.

Prosecutors are also appealing, hoping to have Duch's sentence increased to life, commuted to 45 years for time already served.


During his trial, Duch repeatedly apologised for overseeing mass murder at the detention centre, also known as S-21, but shocked the court by asking to be acquitted in his closing statement in November 2009.

The defence team will claim in their appeal on Monday that the UN-backed court has no jurisdiction over Duch because he was not one of the regime's senior leaders nor one of those most responsible for the crimes committed.

"The court is not allowed to try a person that does not fall into one of those two groups", Kang Ritheary, one of Duch's lawyers, told AFP, adding that Duch was only following orders.

"He had to try his best at work in order to save his life."

Anne Heindel, a legal advisor at the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which collects evidence of Khmer Rouge atrocities, said the defence strategy was "reckless" because the court "has wide discretion in determining whom to prosecute".

"Instead of responding to the prosecution's multiple arguments for a longer sentence, the defence keeps reiterating this one untimely and uncompelling argument," Heindel said.

Prosecutors say in their appeal brief that the verdict did "not adequately reflect the seriousness of the crimes or the respondent's role in those crimes".

They also want enslavement, imprisonment, torture, extermination and other inhumane acts to be added to Duch's list of convictions.

Chum Mey, 80, one of the few survivors of S-21, said "there would be no justice" if Duch is released and he should be jailed for life.

Led by "Brother Number One" Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge wiped out nearly a quarter of Cambodia's population through starvation, overwork and execution.

S-21, in Phnom Penh, was at the centre of the regime's security apparatus and thousands of inmates were taken from there for execution in a nearby orchard.

Duch has been detained since 1999, when he was found working as a Christian aid worker in the jungle. He was formally arrested by the tribunal in July 2007.

Four of the regime's most senior surviving members are due to go on trial later this year and Duch is expected to appear as a witness.

The tribunal, dogged by allegations of political interference, has yet to announce whether it will pursue two more cases against five more former Khmer Rouge cadres.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, himself a mid-level cadre before he turned against the movement, said late last year no new trials would be allowed.

But observers say Duch's court proceedings were free from political pressure, even though one of his lawyers has also acted for the premier.

"Chbaab Dael Taeng Min Chenh" a Poem in Khmer by NhiekKiri

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 08:02 PM PDT

DAP: The breaking news in Cambodia: “Lower Mekong Countries discuss Laos’s Xayaburi Mainstream hydropower project” plus 9 more

DAP: The breaking news in Cambodia: “Lower Mekong Countries discuss Laos’s Xayaburi Mainstream hydropower project” plus 9 more


Lower Mekong Countries discuss Laos’s Xayaburi Mainstream hydropower project

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 01:47 AM PDT

"Four lower Mekong basin countries has started discussing in friendly manners in group to seek best conclusion for Laos to build Xayaburi dam which produced 1260 megawatts electricity, the statement from Mekong River commission said on Saturday.

"They agreed that they would join with the intent to seek a conclusion at the newly-scheduled meeting on 21 April 2011 and when the deadline is April 22," it said, adding that the four met in Cambodia from 24-26 March.  The Xayaburi project is tabled as one of a wide range of agenda items at this meeting.

It added the deadline for reaching a decision comes closer; four Lower Mekong Basin Countries have agreed to convene a special session on the prior consultation process for the proposed Xayaburi mainstream hydropower development project, before "determining how they should proceed with the proposal".

The countries, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Viet Nam, reached this decision at the 33rd Mekong River Commission (MRC) Joint Committee (JC) Meeting in Preah Sihanouk Province which ends tomorrow.

IThe prior consultation process is one of a number of protocols in the 1995 Mekong Agreement to promote cooperation in sustainable management of the basin's water resources and avoid regional disputes developing.

It added: The Xayaburi hydropower project would be the first such project on the Mekong mainstream downstream of China and would be capable of generating 1260 megawatts of electricity, mainly for export to Thailand. The developer is Ch. Karnchang Public Co. Ltd. of Thailand who negotiated a tariff agreement with EGAT in July 2010.

The Xayaburi project, proposed by the Government of Lao PDR, falls under the MRC's Procedures for Notification, Prior Consultation and Agreement (PNPCA) process, which require that the four countries come together with the aim of reaching a conclusion on the proposal within six months of its submission. The deadline for the end of this formal process is 22 April 2011.

The Xayaburi project, designed to generate power for consumption in Thailand and Lao PDR, is tabled for consideration, among other management, organizational and procedures-related matters, at this internal meeting.

"All members have considered about the impact of development of Mekong River and social -economic and environment matters for mutual benefits of people's health and natural resources," said Mr. Sin Niny, Vice-chairman of the Cambodia National Mekong Committee and Alternate Member of the MRC Council for Cambodia who presided over the MRC Joint Committee Meeting 24-26 March.  "We considered about the dubstainble development of this river and today meeting is remarkable. we put things on table for discussion, he noted. It also implemented with 2011-2015 policy of Mekong river commission.

Cuba to carry out economic reforms while keeping socialism

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:56 PM PDT

HAVANA, March 25 (Xinhua) -- The upcoming congress of the Cuban Communist Party in April will introduce several economic reforms while the country retains socialism, Cuban leader Raul Castro said Friday.
Castro said Cuba needs to "correct some mistakes committed in the past five decades of socialism." But he made it clear that Cuba "will not return to capitalism and neo-colonialism" and the updated model for Cuba will primarily be based on a planned economy rather than a market economy."
The new economic policy will conform to the principle that only socialism can overcome the difficulties and preserve the conquests of the Revolution," Castro said.
"The future of the nation is at stake," he said, adding that it is necessary to defend the "permanent discrepancy of the ideas because that's where the best solutions come from."
Meanwhile, Homero Acosta, secretary of the Cuban State Council, said the penal system also needs to be updated along with the economic model.
"The new economic changes will impact every aspect of social life, so it also requires us to modify the criminal law according to the new circumstances," said Acosta.
"It is possible that the typical imprisonment will be replaced by other sanctions like freedom limitation, or correctional labor without confinement, for penalties of up to five years in prison," he said.
Justice Minister Maria Esther Reus said the country needs an updated policy and a legislative development according to the new national reality.
The draft document to be discussed at the party congress in April includes a wide range of topics such as discharging half a million people from over-employed state companies, eliminating excessive social benefits, building a flexible housing market, opening private businesses and implementing a new tax system.
Earlier this week, former Cuban leader Fidel Castro talked about the party structure for the first time since handing over power to his brother Raul in 2006, saying the Cuba leader should at the same time be the first secretary of the party.

WTO rules against U.S. in orange juice dispute with Brazil

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:55 PM PDT

RIO DE JANEIRO, March. 25 (Xinhua) -- The World Trade Organization said on Friday that the U.S. anti-dumping duties on imports of Brazilian orange juice violated international trade rules.
In its final report, the WTO ruled that the U.S. anti-dumping proceedings related to the orange juice are inconsistent with article of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
"In light of its findings, the Panel recommended that the United States take the necessary measures to bring its measure into conformity with its obligations under the Anti-Dumping Agreement," the WTO said.
Brazil is the world's largest exporter of orange juice, selling mainly to the United States and the European Union.
The United States imposed up to 60 percent of tariff on Brazilian orange juice, which Washington claimed was being sold at artificially low prices.
Welcoming the Panel's findings, Brazil hoped the United States "brings its measure into conformity without delay as a clear sign of respect to the multilateral trade disciplines."
The Brazilian government said it is closely following the progress of the U.S. Department of Commerce's "proposed rule," which will end some uses of the zeroing calculation of anti-dumping duties against foreign products.

Roundup: Careful planning vital for future of world's emerging cities

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:55 PM PDT

CALGARY, Canada, March 25 (Xinhua) -- The future of the world's rapidly-growing emerging cities was the focus of the Inter-American Development Bank conference in Calgary, Alberta, Friday as the Washington-based organization announced a plan to partner with intermediate cities in Latin America and the Caribbean to promote sustainable urban development.
The 48-country body, which makes loans to governments and government agencies to promote economic and social development and regional integration, will help cities identify their development challenges, prioritize investments and find funding sources from international and domestic investors.
IDB President Luis Alberto Moreno described emerging cities as those with populations between 100,000 and two million. While Latin America and the Caribbean accounted for more than 140 of these cities worldwide, there were about 3,500 such cities that are home to about two billion people, a third of the world's population.
The Colombian diplomat said finding sustainable solutions for these cities in such areas as transport, waste disposal, energy, climate change and fiscal management was vital for the world's future as such centers continued to grow.
To emphasize, he pointed out 2010 was the first year in recorded history that city dwellers had outnumbered those living in the countryside.
"On average, the population of these emerging cities is growing two to three times faster than megacities. In fact, giant cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires will essentially stop expanding in the coming decade," Moreno said.
"This means that most of the urban growth in the next 20 years will happen in emerging cities. In order to keep up with that growth, city governments will need to spend trillions of dollars on new infrastructure, housing and public buildings. They will also need to find vast new sources of water, electricity and fuel.
"As a result, what happens in these emerging cities in the next 20 years will have huge consequences for the rest of the planet. Cities in general already produce approximately 75 percent of total CO2 emissions. In Latin America, emerging cities could both contribute to climate change and become victims of it."
The choice of Calgary may seem a strange venue to host a conference focusing on Latin America and the Caribbean, but the capital of Canada's oil industry has been at the forefront of sustainable practices. Last year it was ranked the world's top eco-city by the Mercer Quality of Living survey, beating out 320 other cities.
For the 3,000 delegates visiting Calgary, which was experiencing a late-season snowstorm Friday, on hand were mayors from various Canadian cities to pass on their technical expertise on what they were calling the three pillars of urban sustainability strategies.
They included environmental sustainability and climate change, integrated urban development and fiscal sustainability and good governance.
Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the idea of having the conference in Alberta province was about "sharing ideas about long-term planning, budgeting and financial sustainability," adding his city was a world leader in water.
"Our clean water systems and waste water systems are very good, and in fact we will be going on a tour with some of these mayors on Sunday of our new Pinecreek water treatment plant," said the Harvard University-trained Nenshi, who became Canada's first Muslim mayor when he was elected last October.
"We are also great leaders in the areas of municipal planning. Our  'Imagine Calgary' process planning 100 years into the future is something cities across the region, across the world really, are trying to emulate. Are we perfect? Absolutely not, we've got a lot to learn from them as well. But if we can share some of the things that have worked for us with them and learn from other folks we can all be stronger."
Adding to the prestige of the IDB conference was Tony Blair. The former British prime minister spoke to delegates at the Mayors/Municipal Program luncheon via teleconferencing, emphasizing how critical it was in meeting the challenges of rapid development, but doing it in a way that was economically, socially and environmentally sustainable.
By example, he mentioned the Chinese 1,000-Village initiative which is an attempt to ensure that development in China is done in a way compatible with meeting the challenge of climate change.
"They are also part of a growing worldwide movement and that is how we match the tremendous ambition that people have today for economic growth, for higher standards of living, for the prosperity that they need, with economic, social and environmental systems that are aligned. This is the challenge that we have. I think we can meet that challenge but we have to be aware of the fact that unless you put the right policies in place it's going to be very, very tough to do,"  Blair said.
"There is a real chance to make a big difference in the years to come and the place to start is exactly where you (the IDB) are starting, with the emerging cities where people are going to live and work. And if we don't get the environmental policies right in this area, we'll not get it right anywhere," he added.

Chinese envoy calls for peaceful solution to Palestinian-Israeli conflict

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:49 PM PDT

RAMALLAH, March 25 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Chinese Mideast envoy Wu Sike said here Friday that China hopes for a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict through negotiations.
Despite recent developments in the Middle East, the decades-old feud between the Israelis and the Palestinians remains the core issue in the region, Wu said at a press conference following talks with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.
China unswervingly backs the Palestinian people's efforts to establish an independent and sovereign state and achieve national reconciliation among different factions, he said.
Beijing urges all relevant parties to create appropriate conditions and restart the stalled Middle East peace process as soon as possible, Wu said, adding that Israel should stop settlement expansion in Palestinian territories.
The parties involved should comply with relevant UN resolutions, the Arab Peace Initiative and the two-state solution when negotiating a settlement, the envoy stressed.
A peaceful solution to the protracted conflict will not only serve the interests of the Palestinian people but contribute to regional peace and stability, he said.
Abbas, for his part, thanked China for its support for the Palestinian struggle for statehood, and stressed that the Palestinian side appreciates the international community's efforts to bring forth a Palestinian state and halt Israel's settlement expansion.
Abbas also briefed Wu on the Palestinian side's preparations for next month's meeting of the Middle East Quartet, which groups the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States.
During his visit to the Palestinian territories, Wu also met with Saeb Erekat, a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization.
Wu, on a Middle East tour, visited Israel on Thursday. He will also travel to Syria, Lebanon and Qatar.

Portugal's opposition party takes lead: polls

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:50 PM PDT

LISBON, March 25 (Xinhua) -- Pedro Passos Coelho from the center-right Social Democratic Party (PSD) is likely to be the next Portuguese prime minister, according to a poll published Friday.
The PSD would have 47.3 percent of the vote, and the ruling Socialist Party would have 25 percent, if a general election was held nowadays, according to the poll published by the Diario Economico newspaper.
This is the first poll published after Prime Minister Jose Socrates announced his resignation following the parliament's rejection of his austerity plan.
The PSD has already announced that they will form a post-electoral coalition with like-minded Democratic and Social Center-People's Party. The two parties together would gain majority in parliament as the latter would have 6.3 percent of the vote, according to the poll.
The other two left-wing parties would maintain their current situation. The Bloco de Esquerda would have 8.9 percent and the Communist Party would have 6.9 percent, said the poll.
Meanwhile, the downgrading of the Portuguese debt ratings by Standard & Poor's agency on Friday is deepening the country's crisis.
In light of the political crisis and the failure of the Portuguese parliament to approve the budget cuts, Standard & Poor's lowered the rating for the Portuguese sovereign debt by two levels from A- to BBB, just one level above junk.
According to the agency, the Portuguese government will have to ask for international help to cope with the debt obligations in a very short term.

News Analysis: Big question marks still hang over Libyan intervention

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:49 PM PDT

London, March 25 (Xinhua) -- A week after the military intervention in Libya, a number of big question marks still hang over the multinational air campaign led by Western countries.
The first one is about the objective of the intervention. The March 17 United Nations resolution sets the goal of protecting Libyan civilians by all necessary means, but an intense debate has ensued over whether to force a leadership change there.
Pointing out the differing voices within NATO about whether the operation should oust Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Dr. Alexis Crow from London-based think tank Chatham House said the Western military bloc has to decide whether Libya is in "a tribal conflict or a war for democracy."
Dr. Christian Le Miere, a research fellow in naval forces and maritime security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, another London-based think tank, said that although the stated intent of British policy is not necessarily a leadership change, Prime Minister David Cameron would not be too unhappy to see the back of Gaddafi.
However, in the wake of the controversial wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, British politicians are wary of being associated with leadership changes in other countries, Le Miere added.
Another question mark is that what if Libyan government troops hide out in towns to protect themselves from airstrikes of the intervening parties, which have ruled out deploying ground troops in the Northern African country.
"It's very difficult if you don't have what's called a hammer and anvil strategy with ground troops complementing air power," Crow said.
Then she put forth another question: What if a stalemate took place, with government troops held off by air attacks but the rebels unable to make headway because of lack of arms? Such a scenario would turn Libya into another Iraq, she said.
Meanwhile, the use of force drains resources, and Britain is in no economic shape to continue a military intervention, Crow cautioned.
Command and control of the multinational operation is also a problem. NATO has agreed to take over command of efforts aimed at enforcing a no-fly zone and an arms embargo, but faces internal disputes on taking charge of offensive operations.
Military strikes against Libyan targets are still led by the United States, which Crow said has been drained "both materially and ideologically in terms of military intervention."
But British Foreign Secretary William Hague has said he has "every expectation that there will be a NATO command of the entire operation, not just the no-fly zone and the arms embargo."
Representatives of intervening countries and international organizations are expected to meet in London next week to map out the political direction for operations in Libya.

Senior Chinese legislator visits Hungary

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:49 PM PDT

BUDAPEST, March 25 (Xinhua) -- Uyunqimg, vice chairwoman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC), met Hungarian Parliament Speaker Laszlo Kover, Vice Speaker Istvan Ujhelyi and Vice Premier Zsolt Semjen separately on Friday.
During the meetings, Uyunqimg said China and Hungary have a long history of friendship and the relations between two nations have witnessed a smooth development since the establishment of their diplomatic ties over 60 years ago.
She said both countries have maintained close high-level exchanges, which have promoted the deepening of political mutual trust and rapid development of the economic and trade relations.
Hungary has become the third largest trading partner and the largest importing source of China in Central and Eastern Europe. Bilateral cooperation in cultural and educational areas is expanding as well, she added.
The vice chairwoman said China is willing to join hands with Hungary, based on the principle of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit, to further enhance the traditional friendship and expand exchanges and cooperation in legislation so as to promote their partnership.
Kover and other Hungarian parliament and government leaders saluted the achievements China has made in its economic and social development.
They said Hungary hopes the two nations could deepen their mutually beneficial cooperation in the fields of economy and trade, investment, culture and education.
They also noted Hungary, during its EU presidency, will make an effort to promote a more steady and healthy development of China-Europe ties.
The Chinese delegation led by Uyunqimg arrived here Thursday and will leave for Portugal on Sunday.

Chinese, Cameroon leaders mark 40th anniversary of ties

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:46 PM PDT

BEIJING, March 26 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao exchanged congratulatory messages with his Cameroonian counterpart Paul Biya Saturday to mark the 40th anniversary of bilateral ties.
In his message, Hu hailed the healthy and steady development of China-Cameroon relations over the past four decades.
The two countries had kept frequent high-level exchanges of visits, conducted fruitful cooperation in various fields, carried out programs within the framework of the China-Africa cooperation forum, and maintained close coordination and collaboration on regional and international affairs, Hu said.
The development of China-Cameroon ties was due to the increasing political mutual trust between the two sides and to the unswerving efforts made by both sides to promote the ties, he said.
The Chinese president said China was ready to push the relationship to a higher level with the 40th anniversary of the ties being a new starting point.
Biya said in his message that, through joint efforts, relations between Cameroon and China had been developing continuously, and cooperation in various fields had been expanded, contributing to the reinforcement of friendship and mutual respect between the two peoples.
While appreciating the aid provided by the Chinese government in the process of Cameroon's modernization, Biya said China had become an important strategic partner of his country.
He looked forward to continuing consolidation of the ties in the future to the benefit of both countries.
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi and his Cameroonian counterpart Henri Eyebe Ayissi also extended congratulatory messages on the same day.

Xinhua world economic news summary at 0430 GMT, March 26

Posted: 25 Mar 2011 09:46 PM PDT

WASHINGTON -- Revised figures released by the U.S. Federal Reserve on Friday showed that the nation's industrial production capacity utilization reached a trough of 67. 3 percent in June 2009, before rebounding steadily through the end of 2010, evidence of the gradual recovery of the U.S. economy.
The U.S. central bank said that the rate of capacity utilization for total industry stood at 81.1 percent in 2007, 0.7 percentage point above its long-run level between 1972 and 2010 average of 80.4 percent.
Utilization rates plunged in 2008 and in the first half of 2009, as the economy was hit hard by the worst recession in decades. (U.S.-Production-Capacity)
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KUWAIT CITY -- An unexpected sandstorm that swept Kuwait on Friday forced the oil-rich Gulf emirate to suspend its oil exploration and exports, state-owned Kuwaiti Petroleum Corporation said.
The KPC said it is committed to honoring its contracts with local and foreign customers through its emergency plans.
"Due to the bad weather the state of emergency was declared in all KPC facilities, petro stations and export outlets," said Sheik Talal, an official at the KPC. (Kuwait-Oil-Storm)
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RIO DE JANEIRO -- The CEO of Brazil's mining giant Vale, the world's leading iron ore producer, will step down possibly due to pressure from the government, local daily O Globo said on Friday.
According to the daily, Roger Agnelli, who has been Vale's CEO since 2001, will be replaced by a Vale employee.
Vale has yet to confirm Agnelli's departure. Earlier on Friday, Agnelli released a statement, saying he did not know any changes in the company's top level. (Brazil-Mining Giant-CEO)
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RIO DE JANEIRO -- The World Trade Organization said on Friday that the U.S. anti-dumping duties on imports of Brazilian orange juice violated international trade rules.
In its final report, the WTO ruled that the U.S. anti-dumping proceedings related to the orange juice are inconsistent with article of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
"In light of its findings, the Panel recommended that the United States take the necessary measures to bring its measure into conformity with its obligations under the Anti-Dumping Agreement," the WTO said.
Brazil is the world's largest exporter of orange juice, selling mainly to the United States and the European Union. (Brazil-U.S.-Orange Juice)